notmuch-hello (called also through notmuch-hello-update, bound to '='
by default) tries to find the widget under or following point before
refresh, and put the point back to the widget afterwards. The code has
grown quite complicated, and has at least the following issues:
1) All the individual section functions have to include code to
support point placement. If there is no such support, point is
dropped to the search box. Only saved searches and all tags
sections support point placement.
2) Point placement is based on widget-value. If there are two widgets
with the same widget-value (for example a saved search with the
same name as a tag) the point is moved to the earlier one, even if
point was on the later one.
3) When first entering notmuch-hello notmuch-hello-target is nil, and
point is dropped to the search box.
Moving the point to the search box is annoying because the user is
required to move the point before being able to enter key bindings.
Simplify the code by removing all point placement based on widgets, as
it does not work properly, and trying to fix that would unnecessarily
complicate the code.
Save current line and column before refresh, and restore them
afterwards. Sometimes, if notmuch-show-empty-saved-searches is nil,
and the refresh adds or removes saved searches from the list, this has
the appearance of moving the point relative to the nearest
widgets. This is a much smaller and less frequent problem than the
ones listed above.
GMIME_IS_MULTIPART and GMIME_IS_MESSAGE both handle NULL pointers
gracefully, but the G_OBJECT_TYPE used in the error handling block
dereferences it without checking it first.
Fix this by checking whether parent->part is valid.
Found using the clang static analyzer.
Signed-off-by: Justus Winter <4winter@informatik.uni-hamburg.de>
Annotating functions that do not return with the noreturn attribute
(which is understood by both gcc and clang) prevents static analyzers
from generating false positives (internal_error is used to terminate
the process and is used extensively in error handling code paths).
Remove the return statement that was placed there to appease the
compiler. Functions annotated with noreturn are not supposed to return
any values.
Signed-off-by: Justus Winter <4winter@informatik.uni-hamburg.de>
Fix the COERCE_STATUS macro to handle _internal_error being declared
as void function.
Note that the function _internal_error does not return. Evaluating to
NOTMUCH_STATUS_SUCCESS is done purely to appease the compiler.
Signed-off-by: Justus Winter <4winter@informatik.uni-hamburg.de>
This attribute is understood by gcc since version 2.5. clang provides
support for testing for function attributes using __has_attribute. For
other compilers this macro evaluates to the empty string.
Signed-off-by: Justus Winter <4winter@informatik.uni-hamburg.de>
__has_attribute is defined by clang and tests whether a given function
attribute is supported by clang.
Add a compatibility macro for other compilers.
Signed-off-by: Justus Winter <4winter@informatik.uni-hamburg.de>
Since marking a message as read can now be a user customized set of
tag changes, make reversing this easier. Allow a prefix argument to
notmuch-show-mark-read to reverse the marking as read, similar to the
unarchiving in notmuch-show-archive-message.
While at it, update the relevant documentation to match that of other
automatic tagging (i.e. archive and reply).
Since archiving a thread can now be a user customized set of tag
changes, make reversing this easier. Allow a prefix argument to
notmuch-search-archive-thread to reverse the archiving, similar to the
unarchiving in notmuch-show-archive-message.
Add support for customization of the tag changes that are applied when
a message or a thread is archived. Instead of hard-coded removal of
the "inbox" tag, the user can now specify a list of tag changes to
perform.
Use new target release-checks in place of verify-version-debian,
verify-version-python verify-version-manpage. This target executes
devel/release-checks.sh which does all the verifications the three
dropped targets did, and some more.
Currently Makefile.local contains some machine executable release
checking functionality. This is unnecessarily complex way to do it:
Multiline script functionality is hard to embed -- from Makefile point
of view there is just one line split using backslashes and every line
ends with ';'. It is hard to maintain such "script" when it gets longer.
The embedded script does not fail as robust as separate script; set -eu
could be added to get same level of robustness -- but the provided
Bourne Again Shell (bash) script exceeds this with 'set -o pipefail',
making the script to fail when any of the commands in pipeline fails
(and not just the last one).
Checking for release is done very seldom compared to all other use;
The whole Makefile.local gets simpler and easier to grasp when most
release checking targets are removed.
When release checking is done, the steps are executed sequentially;
nothing is allowed to be skipped due to some satisfied dependency.
On FreeBSD, and probably anywhere else someone installed xapian to
some other prefix, we need to use XAPIAN_LDFLAGS to make the linker can
actually find libxapian.
Before the change, test_expect_equal_file() function treated the first
argument as "actual output file" and the second argument as "expected
output file". When the test fails, the files are copied for later
inspection. The first files was copied to "$testname.output" and the
second file to "$testname.expected". The argument order for
test_expect_equal_file() is often wrong which results in confusing
diff output and incorrectly named files.
The patch solves the issue by changing test_expect_equal_file() to
treat arguments just as two files, without any special properties
(like "actual" and "expected"). The file names for copying is now
based on the given file name: "$testname.$file1" and
"$testname.$file2". E.g. if test_expect_equal_file() is called with
"OUTPUT" and "EXPECTED", the copied files can be named
"emacs.1.OUTPUT" and "emacs.1.EXPECTED".
The down side of this approach is that diff argument order depends on
test_expect_equal_file() argument order. So sometimes we get diff
from expected to actual results, and sometimes the other way around.
But the files are always named correctly.
* emacs/notmuch.el (notmuch-search-mode):
`notmuch-search-tag-all' currently uses the current query string
instead of `notmuch-search-find-thread-id-region-search', which
might cause a race condition.
Previously, the cli parser was a little erratic in what errors it
reported and would fail silently in many cases (for example, when no
argument was passed to an integer option). This was particularly
annoying as the user could not (easily) tell whether the command
failed or just there were no search results.
This patch tries to make the handling consistent and return a helpful
error message in all cases.
The API documentation (notmuch.h) states that the parameter may be NULL,
but the implementation only checked the current element, potentially
dereferencing a NULL pointer in the process.
Signed-off-by: Sascha Silbe <sascha-pgp@silbe.org>
When the From: field in patch email does not contain 'realname'
field, the patch listing does not show anything as patch sender.
In this case use the part before '@' in mail address as the sender
identification in patch listing.
The behaviour of "emacsclient --eval nil" changed from emacs23 to
emacs24, and in emacs24 it prints 'nil' rather than an empty string.
(format "%S" foo) produces a sexpr form of foo, and is consistent
between the two versions.
The version of message.el in emacs24 omits the charset=us-ascii,
causing the current version of this test to fail. With this patch, we
accept either option. According to RFC 2046, they are semantically
equivalent.
When running emacs tests using emacs 23.1.1 the tests block (until timeout)
when emacs function (notmuch-test-wait) is called.
There is an emacs bug #2930 titled:
23.0.92; `accept-process-output' and `sleep-for' do not run sentinel
It seems this is present in emacs 23.1.
Calling list-processes after accept-process-output seems work around
this problem; in case Emacs version is 23.1 a defadvice is activated
to do just that.
notmuch-test-wait called sleep-for in a loop to wait unconditionally 0.1
seconds while waiting for process to exit.
accept-process-output returns as soon as there is any data available
from process, so using it avoids unnecessary fixed delays.
Both of these functions run process sentinels.
The `notmuch-show-mark-read-tags' lists tags that are to be applied when
message is read. By default, the only value is "-unread" which will remove
the unread tag. Among other uses, this variable can be used to stop
notmuch-show from modifying tags when message is shown (by setting the
variable to an empty list).
0.13.2: `contrib/notmuch-deliver` is in backticks elsewhere in
NEWS file. Commands are generally written in backticks in latest
NEWS entries.
0.13.1: Dropped period at the end of Title
'Fix compilation of ruby bindings',
as all other titles do not end with a period.
Previously, notmuch-show-previous-message would move to the beginning
of the message before the message containing point. This patch makes
it instead move to the previous message *boundary*. That is, if point
isn't already at the beginning of the message, it moves to the
beginning of the current message. This is consistent with
notmuch-show-next-message, which can be thought of as moving to the
next message boundary. Several people have expressed a preference for
this.
The recent change to use json for notmuch-search.el introduced a bug
in the code for keeping position on refresh. The problem is a
comparison between (plist-get result :thread) and a thread-id returned
by notmuch-search-find-thread-id: the latter is prefixed with
"thread:"
We fix this by adding an option to notmuch-search-find-thread-id to
return the bare thread-id. It appears that notmuch-search-refresh-view
is the only caller of notmuch-search that supplies a thread-id so this
change should be safe (but could theoretically break users .emacs
functions).
The string function in a sprinter may be called with a NULL string
pointer (eg if a header is absent). This causes a segfault. We fix
this by checking for a null pointer in the string functions and update
the sprinter documentation.
At the moment some output when format=text is done directly rather than
via an sprinter: in that case a null pointer is passed to printf or
similar and a "(null)" appears in the output. That behaviour is not
changed in this patch.
Previously, the Emacs byte compiler produced the warning
the function `remove-if-not' might not be defined at runtime.
because we only required cl at compile-time (not runtime). This fixes
this warning by requiring cl at runtime, ensuring that the definition
of remove-if-not is available.